Looking at a map there could possibly be beaches outside the bay. Really?
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"he [John Ashcroft] deliberately left Jesus out of office prayers to avoid
offending non-Christians." - Ben Shapiro 27/2/2003
John W.
I do.
>
> Looking at a map there could possibly be beaches outside the bay. Really?
There are beaches very near the city, but you wouldn't want to go swimming
there. Well, you might. I wouldn't. A little further west, an hour or so
by car there are better spots, or so I have heard. Whenever I want to go
the beach I go to Thailand.
Friendly city. :)
Haven't been there for 10 years, but yes.
http://kyushu.com/fukuoka/places_to_go/x/1,beaches,0,0,1,1,0,0,x.shtml
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"All FDR undid was the value of the dollar"
Kevin Gowen (really)
I'm living in Fukuoka since April, but I still don't know much of the
city.
The only beach I've been to is Shikanoshima. The view is beautiful,
but the beach itself is not so great... well, maybe the problem is
that I can't help comparing it with Brazilian beaches.
I've been told that Momochihama is nice, though.
Anyway, now it's tsuyu so I don't even bother.
[]s
Rafael Caetano
It really annoys me when English tourist guides don't include the kanji of place
names, unlike the very excellent Yamasa guide (the section on Yasaka is the
best). How the hell are you supposed to find "Keya" on a map?
> It really annoys me when English tourist guides don't include the kanji of
> place names, unlike the very excellent Yamasa guide (the section on Yasaka
> is the best). How the hell are you supposed to find "Keya" on a map?
I bless the genius who started the trend towards bilingual maps. And
curse those who haven't taken the hint.
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Louise Bremner (log at gol dot com)
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